Greenopolis Rewards Earned
140,103,291
Total LBs of WMRA Recycled
60,766,185
Recovered by Greenopolis
42,354,383

What’s old is new again

PrintPrintE-mailE-mail 0 comments

cfl 1 2 3 4by Willy Ritch

A Sunday Washington Post story
on energy efficiency efforts by states and utilities points out that
we’ve been down this road before.  In the 80s it was called
“conservation” instead of “efficiency,” and it was a strategy that was
abandoned by utilities during the deregulation era, when they were
cutting costs to try and become more competitive.  Rising energy prices
and the growing realization that we have to do something about global
warming has brought about a revival, but these are not your parents’
conservation programs:

Advocates of energy-efficiency programs say today’s
strategies are more refined because of new technology. The twisty,
low-energy light bulbs, which use one-third of the power of
conventional ones, didn’t exist a decade ago. Hot-water heaters, stoves
and other appliances burn far less power now than they used to.

“What was energy efficient 10 years ago is not energy efficient
today,” said Malcolm Woolf, Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley’s top energy
adviser….

Today’s programs are being marketed more aggressively and offer homeowners more incentives.

“Marketed”–there is an important word. 
Instead of lecturing the public about how they must turn down their
thermostats and not drive as much, we now know that it’s much more
effective to market clean energy and energy efficiency as if they were
any other product–like Apple computers or Coke.  Communicating the
benefits of efficiency instead of talking about “conservation” in terms
of sacrifice is so much more effective.  (And it’s what we do here at SmartPower.)

Share